Enrico Berlinguer, (born May 25, 1922, Sassari, Sardinia, Italy—died June 11, 1984, Padua), secretary-general of the Italian Communist Party (Partito Comunista Italiano) from March 1972 until his death. He was a leading spokesman for “national communism,” seeking independence from Moscow and favouring the adaptation of Marxism to local requirements.

Berlinguer was born into a middle-class Sardinian family. His father, a socialist, became a deputy and later senator. The son became a Communist Party member in 1943 and was put in charge of the Young Communists in his hometown of Sassari. In 1944 he took part in demonstrations against Italy’s Fascist regime, was arrested, and spent three months in jail. After the war he continued as an organizer of communist youth in Milan and then Rome, becoming a member of the party’s Central Committee in 1945 and of the party executive in 1948.

Berlinguer held a series of posts within the party, both in Rome and in Sardinia, before being elected assistant secretary in 1969 and secretary general in 1972. As secretary-general of the largest communist organization in western Europe, Berlinguer frequently declared his readiness to take an active part in government in what he termed a “historic compromise” between Christian Democrats and Communists. Although his proposal for such a coalition government was never fully realized, Berlinguer did wield considerable influence as a popular national figure and as leader of a party that controlled many local governments nationwide. In 1976 he was invited to serve in a formal consultative role to the prime minister—the first time in 15 years that an Italian communist had held such a position—and in 1979 he became a member of the European Parliament. Under his leadership, the number of votes for the Italian Communist Party peaked.